There are some regular techie drones at my work that started doing PX90 workout and they are ripped now. Truly amazing..
Some additional thoughts:
-If you have a road bike, you can get a stationary bike 'trainer' (stand that provides resistance to the rear wheel). The trainers usually are pretty small and not that expensive. Instant stationary bike (your own bike).
-If you have stairs in or around your dwelling, running stairs is a great cardio workout. All it takes is one flight, run up and back down repeatedly. Even going slow it is hard to 'dog it'. Also great as training for skiing, (running down the stairs is what does the most good as ski training).
-Find a low (coffee table hight) table and do step-ups on and off it. Do this for 10-20 minutes and you usually have a decent sweat going. Raise intensity by stepping on and off more quickly. Be careful though if your knees get unhappy with this one.
-Of all the stationary machines, rowers are probably the best for a full body work out, but most are pretty loud and take up a lot of space.
-It is possible to get a good cardio workout using weights, even a fairly light set of dumbbells and body weight exercises. Just choose lifts that use large groups of muscles with light enough weights so that you can do sets that last for 20-60 seconds and circuits that allow you to keep your rest intervals short (similar to the length of time spent on lifting sets). Get a cheap heart rate monitor and get your heart rate into an aerobic zone, then keep the rest intervals short enough so that you don't get out of the zone. Do ballistic stretches, rather than tension stretches to keep heart rate up while stretching.
"I just want to thank everyone who made this day necessary." -Yogi Berra
I run and ride plenty myself. If you have the time and live in a location conducive to it then definitely get out there. The OP doesn't have the time though. If your goal is maximum fitness gains per minute spent exercising, hours of low to moderate intensity cycling/running/elliptical is not the path you want to choose.
Then you haven't tried hard enough. Do 100 burpees for time, I guarantee that by #50 you will be sucking gas harder than you ever do on a bike. If you aren't, then you didn't go as fast as you could have. Tabata several bodyweight movements in a row and you will be crushed.
On P90X: It is a good program. Intensity is emphasized and minimal equipment is required. But, in the end it is a just a few DVDs and you will get bored with it.
the "Iron Gym," yeah that piece of shit looking door mount hangy thingy: $20.
Its actually really useful in a lot of ways, doesn't take up much space. good stretching tool, good pull-up bar w/ multiple grips, great push up bar. Get this and a standard set of solid free weights, long bar, curl bar, dumbell set, and some auxiliary equip (kettle bells, med balls, sit-up ball) and this workout regime http://www.crossfit.com/ and you will be set.
I am going to vote for a rowing machine for cardio. Like swimming, whenever your working out your lower and upper body at the same time, your doing double duty on your heart.
20 min a day on that, then a 10-15 minute perfect pushup workout is golden if you lack time. You can also do the pushups at night or at lunch. Yes, I own the perfect pushups, and by golly it works. I got up to about 250 a day and saw my waist size drop 3 inches a couple of yrs ago. With a rower, i think it would be a sweet workout.
^^^ For years, the only machine that you'd find in a Crossfit gym.^^^
I would like to suggest a set of olympic weights, if you have the skills to use them. You'' need a partner. That will give you broad reaching access to strength training.
Go on the Crossfit HQ and start following their WOD (workout of the day). They have all of the lifts and WODs as demo vids right there for you. BTW, row 2000 for time is a WOD. 7 min and you're done.
Remember, constantly varied - and lots of lifting. Strength is the toughest part to do right at home and it's important. Heaving lifting will give you the biggest bang for the buck.
shakeweight, duh!
GIFSoup
I have a bike (recumbent Lifecycle, 15 years old, just had it rebuilt), a bunch of weights, an eliptical I never use but the wife does, and a C2. I rowed when I was in High school, it's cool getting back to it. we just bought a house by the ocean and I'm gonna buy one of these:
(Not me in pic, I swear)
It has a sliding seat and it's more or less unsinkable and very stable. I need high freeboard and stability because I'll have to go around this point to get to the river where there's about 8 miles of basically lat water. I am stoked. Rowing on the C2 will be even better than now. I'm at around 8:30 for 2000m, not too great but I started out over 10:00 and it hasn't even been three months yet
i bet that little thing rips.
Last edited by Snow Dog; 01-17-2011 at 07:52 PM.
If you have a problem & think that someone else is going to solve it for you then you have two problems.
Havent read the whole thread, but my suggestion is get a boxing (heavy) bag, a few dumbells ranging from 2-10lbs, to hold while hitting the bag and doing kicks, kicking a bag while holding weights in your hands works your legs and especially core, and of course hitting a bag with weights works your core and upper body.
Add a situp/crunch/pushup/etc routine using weights before working out on the bag,and mix in various plyometrics during your bag sessions, combined with a short run afterward, and that should be about as good as almost anything you can do at a gym.
Mix in a weekly hike and tri weekly mnt bike ride and you will be a beast. This was my plan this summer, and it has worked well.
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"We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats
"I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso
Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.
Okay, the lifecycle finally bit the dust and I hate the elliptical, it kills my knees. So what's a good exercise bike to get (and why did I get a recumbent last time and should I get another?)? I was thinking a spinning-type bike but I don't know any good ones.
I'm gonna sell the elliptical and replace it with a treadmill. What do we think of NordicTrack treadmills? They're not all that expensive and pretty compact is what I like about them (and it's also all I know about them).
Oh yeah - I bought the boat in the picture up there ^^^ (well not that exact one but the same kind), getting psyched for warmer weather to use it.
I used to use something called a Trimax machine. It was a very professionally-made, health club-quality machine similar in utility to a Universal system but using all pneumatics (like a rower), instead of cabled weights. It had lats, pull-downs, chin bar, flies, leg extension/ bench press bench...a ton of stuff. An all-inclusive workout.
They were expensive new...like $2000...but used you can sometimes find them for $100-300. They are made with excellent, heavy-duty material...nearly same build quality as Cybex...but FAR less $$$$. Company that made them went broke and now they're cheap. Craigslist is best, as they're heavy as hell to ship anywhere.
I also highly recommend a used BowFlex...they DO work well and are easy to store.
Rowing: A used Aerodyne....$$$$ but worth it if you can find one.
Elliptical/step??: Just go to "Play it Again Sports"...TONS of used them out there....all pretty cheap.
--
"The reason death sticks so closely to life isn't biological necessity - it's envy. Life is so beautiful that death has fallen in love with it; a jealous, possesive love that grabs at what it can." by Yann Martel from Life of Pi
Posted by DJSapp:
"Squirrels are rats with good PR."
not sure how an elliptical could hurt your knee's ice. that's like, why they were developed. i was on one two days after i tore my mcl last year. that thing had me to 100% in about 6 weeks. godsend i tell you.
edit: i run on a treadmill every day 8 months out of the year. if you go that route, go with the belt type like you linked, vs the type that have a track made up of a series of pieces (like a tank track). they're marketed as "just like running outside" but are ridiculously stiff. absolutely destroys my joints, and im in my low twenties. precor treadmills are the softest IMO.
"The reason death sticks so closely to life isn't biological necessity - it's envy. Life is so beautiful that death has fallen in love with it; a jealous, possesive love that grabs at what it can." by Yann Martel from Life of Pi
Posted by DJSapp:
"Squirrels are rats with good PR."
Yeah I dunno. Whenever I use that thing my knees are sore for a day or two afterwards. I think it has something to do with the way my legs are farther apart on it than they normally are when I walk - it's the inside of my knees that hurts, like I'm knockneed on it or something. I think (I guess at least) that it's the medial collateral that gets sore. I had all kinds of ankle and foot problems, bad ones, for years and now I wear funky custom orthotics all the time, I think there's something fucked up with the way my knee-ankle-hip geometry is to start with and the elliptical highlights it. Or maybe it's something else, all I know is it makes my knees sore after I use it.
Hey, not all of us have a wide stance.
Last edited by iceman; 04-06-2012 at 04:48 PM.
I've got a few kettlebells and am good to go. Did 56 mins tonight and was mixing it up aerobic/anaerobic and some dynamic stuff. I haven't been happier since quitting the gym (though I do miss swimming and cant drag my ass to the POS YMCA here), and have lost more weight since quitting the gym. Huge fan of KBs myself.
パウダーバカ!!
56 min. What did you do for all that time?
4 pages and no requests for naked pics of the GF? Is this place getting civilized?
Quando paramucho mi amore de felice carathon.
Mundo paparazzi mi amore cicce verdi parasol.
Questo abrigado tantamucho que canite carousel.
I HATE ellipticals. They aren't ergonomic at all and definitely hurt my knees. I am absolutely in love with the Cybex Arc Trainer. It feels so good on the knees and really mimics hiking uphill better than anything I've ever been on which is perfect for the backcountry skiers here. I highly recommend trying one out if you get the chance. The great thing about the arc trainer is that it keeps your knee perfectly lined up above your ankle the whole time so your tib/fib are perfectly vertical the entire movement which is great for those of us with bad knees. The only downside is the machines are expensive but hey, how much is the health of your knees worth?
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